Off Road Sports In Ocotillo / Plaster City
Off road atv, utv, and motorcycle riding is a passion not just a sport. Many people who are new to riding, most likely a spectator at first, often have a lot of mis-conceptions about the sport.
While riding in Ocotillo, and Plaster City, California some riders say “We want to go to Glamis, or…” when they don’t realize the level of skill required to ride some of the soft terrain areas like Glamis. To ride quads or dirt bikes at Glamis or Imperial Dunes, you’d have to use paddle tires on the rear the the bike, and you would have to have a great deal of experience with sand riding or you risk damaging the equipment. If you ride a bike in all sand the wrong way, you’ll start burning up clutches, burning valves, and whole host of bad things happen. Not to mention sand is the bikes #1 enemy. It gets in EVERYTHING. It wears on everything.
Plaster City, just outside of Ocotillo, CA on Interstate Highway 8 (E from San Diego) was set aside as one of the largest offroad parks in the United States because it contains a complete cross section of riding terrains, and has been a favorite of experienced riders for decades! Every great rider and fan that comes to Plaster City for the first time doesn’t have any idea the breadth or diversity of the park. Since you can ride in one direction until you run out of gas, the lack of constraints at Plaster City makes it ideal for adventure tours and riding.
From low rolling hills, “woops”, and wide open flats, to mountains of sand (7000 acres of dunes) and some more intimidating hills, Ocotillo and Plaster City will never bore you. Most people ride the park and only see less than 10% of the riding area! That’s how big it is. With 57+ square miles of open riding and hills, Please City was set aside for Congress as a off road motor sports park for a reason…the just simply couldn’t keep riders off of it!!
Superstition Mountain located at the north east side of the park, is a perfect example. From a distance it doesn’t look like anything, then, when you get right up next to it’s face, you realize “dang, this thing is intimidating!’. Surfaces on Superstition range from soft sugar sand bowls, to large lava outcrops, and sheer dirt faces! It has it’s name because it was rumored stolen gold was hidden there during the American Indian Wars. The indians would not have chosen to hide the Army’s gold on Supersition mountain had they thought it would be easy (or impossible) to climb.
Riders everywhere should spend more time exploring Plaster City and Ocotillo. With all of the sand rivers, open flats, mixed terrain, and long standing trails it can be a very rewarding location! There’s a large plaster plant in the middle of a gypsum vein through the middle of the desert that makes a great land mark and meeting place.
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